Your Arsenal

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Your Arsenal album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 39:28

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Rockin'

isjoe10

From Start to finish this is Morrissey's most solid solo outing. And it's got a tough edge that his highly appreciated. Miserabalist's can find comfort(?) in "Seasick, yet Still Docked"

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In my book the best of the post-Smiths

ettett

God I love this record, perhaps that has something to do with its being released my senior year of high school, but Moz is as his sharpest and with Mick Ronson in the booth (and on the six-string?) he finally had a foil to match Johnny. Love this record, best tunes? Someone, We'll Let you Know, Nat'l Front, and the wonderful wonderful Tomorrow... if you're on the fence, get the whole thing, check it out!

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eMusic Features

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Icon: The Smiths

By Matthew Fritch, eMusic Contributor

Go ahead and argue about it, ask your sister or stare at your record collection until the truth falls out: Morrissey/Marr was the best British songwriting duo of the '80s. In a furiously creative period from 1983 to 1987, singer Morrissey and guitarist Johnny Marr, backed by drummer Mike Joyce and bassist Andy Rourke, staged an emotional counter-revolution in pop music. It was a protest of everything we tend to remember - correctly or not… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Morrissey bounced back from the lackluster Kill Uncle with the terrific Your Arsenal. A dynamic, invigorating fusion of glam rock and rockabilly, Your Arsenal rocks harder than any other record Morrissey ever made. Guitarist Alain Whyte’s riffs swagger with a self-absorbed arrogance, and producer Mick Ronson gives the music a tough, stylish sheen — it may be a break from Morrissey’s jangle pop, but the music is sharper than at has been since the Smiths, and so is Morrissey’s pen. Running through his trademark litany of emotional, social, and personal observations, Morrissey is viciously clever and occasionally moving. And the songs — whether it’s the rush of “You’re Gonna Need Someone on Your Side,” the menacing “We’ll Let You Know,” the spare rockabilly bop of “Certain People I Know,” the gospel-tinged “I Know It’s Gonna Happen Someday,” or “Tomorrow” — are uniformly excellent, forming the core of Morrissey’s finest solo record and his best work since The Queen Is Dead. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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